If you are running a dedicated VEP PC and If you are willing to have a workflow in place that is based on "realtime" recording of anything coming from VEP Standalone the benefit will be very fast loading times of your DAW Projects/Songs/Sessions etc. Everything VEP does will be processed on your VEP Computer only.
In Logic Pro you can run Audio and Midi via the "External Instrument" plugin. I dont know if DP9 has an equivalent to that. (latency compensation)
You wont have the benefit of "Bounce in Place"/"Render in Place" but as the Standalone is setup to receive Midi and send Audio the traditional way your DAW host will load much faster (if that matters to you).
You can also run Audio via Ethernet without a soundcard in your VEP machine if you invest 29€/$ in Audinates' DVS (Dante Virtual Sound Card) It allows streaming of 64CH. I've tested it = awesome.
@RootNDoo said:
Midi ports or Midi Channels ?
Can you explain the 24 audio channels ? what are they for ?
Are you using VE PRO ?
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Hi Cyril,
I have one instance of VEPro in my DAW running DP9. I'm currently using VEPro in Server mode, connecting over LAN to a Windows machine where the sounds are hosted. I've connected about 23 MIDI Ports (~370midi channels), and about 24 Stereo channels of audio. The instruments that are hosted in VEPro come back in stem groups, so Channels 1-2 are Woodwinds, 3-4 Brass, 5-6 Orch Perc, 7-8 Strings, etc. I'm currently using 24 stereo channels for the orchestra.
I'm wondering if there is any benefit to running in Standalone Mode, where I have a sound card in the Windows machine with VEPro, route the audio back physically through MADI or ADAT. Would this save on processing power in any way?
I also occassionally have problems with stuck notes in DP, and am wondering if there is any reliability benefit to routing the MIDI through a physical device such as MOTU Timepiece or Unitor 8.
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